Swahili (Kiswahili / كِسوَهِل)

Swahili is a Bantu language spoken in Tanzania, Burundi, Congo (Kinshasa)
Kenya, Mayotte, Mozambique, Oman, Rwanda, Somalia, South Africa, Uganda,
UAE and the USA. Around 5 million people speak Swahili as a native language,
and a further 135 million speak is as a second language. Swahili is an
official language of Tanzania, Uganda and Kenya, and is used as a lingua
franca throughout East Africa.

Status: official language in Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda and the African Union; national language of DR Congo

The majority of people in Tanzania and Kenya speak Swahili as a second
language, and most educated Kenyans are fluent in the language, as it is
compulsory in schools, and also taught in universities. In the Democratic
Republic of Congo Swahili is spoken in the five eastern provinces, and
overall almost half of the population speak it. In Uganda Swahili is widely
spoken among non-Baganda people, and is taught in schools.

The name Swahili comes from the Arabic word سواحل (sawāḥil), the plural of سواحل (sāḥil - boundry, coast) and means
"coastal dwellers". The prefix ki- is attached to nouns in the noun class that includes languages, so Kiswahili means "coastal language".

Swahili includes quite a bit of vocabulary of Arabic origin as a result of
contact with Arabic-speaking traders and and inhabitants of the Swahili Coast -
the coastal area of Kenya, Tanzania and Mozambique, and islands such as Zanzibar
and Comoros. There are also words of German, Portuguese, English, Hindi and French
origin in Swahili due to contact with traders, slavers and colonial officials.

The earliest known pieces of writing, in the Arabic script, in Swaihili are
letters dating from 1711, and the earliest known manuscript, a poetic epic entitled
Utendi wa Tambuka (The History of Tambuka), dates from 1728.
During the the 19th century Swahili was used as the main language of administration by
the European colonial powers in East Africa and under their influence the Latin
alphabet was increasingly used to write it. The first Swahili newspaper, Habari
ya Mwezi, was published by missionaries in 1895.

Sample text

Translation

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are
endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in
a spirit of brotherhood.(Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights)

Learn Swahili: For Beginners and Travellers

by G. O. Oyoo

- includes details of the Swahili alphabet and pronunciation;
a guide to Swahili pronouns, sentence structure and sentence construction;
useful words and phrases in various scenarios, and an English-Swahili
dictionary.